User:Gaethan9/Buxus arborea/Bibliography

Buxus Arborea

Introduction

Buxus Arborea is found mostly in the island of Jamacia. It contains capsule fruit. Buxus Arborea contains compound leaves. In addition, it is perennially grown. Buxus arborea is found in the boxwood family, also known as the buxaceae. Buxus arborea is part of the plantae kingdom. The actual species name is Buxus Arborea Proctor. The class that Buxus Arborea is a part of is the Magnoliopsida class.

Uses

Buxus Arborea can be used for wood carving, and hedge structure.

Distribution

Buxus Arborea is distributed in the United States (NY, OH, NC, TN, VA)

Description

Buxus arborea produces wood. Buxus arborea is a dicot plant, and it can be an evergreen shrub or a tree. These shrubs and trees can grow up to 2-12 meters tall. The fruits are very small and can be 0.5 cm-1.5 cm wide. The leaves are typically alternate on stems. The Buxus Arborea have several tiny seeds that attract pollinators like birds.

Toxicity

May cause skin rash, vomiting, or diarrhea if exposed to the leaves.

Cultivation

Buxus Arborea typically like to grow in the outdoors. They grow in warm temperatures predominately.